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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › El_CidEl Cid - Wikipedia

    El Cid began a siege of Valencia. A December 1093 attempt to break the siege failed. By the time the siege ended in May 1094, El Cid had carved out his own principality on the coast of the Mediterranean. Officially, El Cid ruled in the name of Alfonso; in practice, El Cid was fully independent.

  3. Jan 2, 2020 · The real El Cid, the man named Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar, did not own two swords that he called Colada and Tizona, nor did he have a horse named Babieca, and he never forced King Alfonso VI to...

  4. El Cid was educated in the Castilian royal court, serving the prince and future king Sancho II, the son of Ferdinand I of León (the Great). When Ferdinand died in 1065, he had continued his father's goal of enlarging his territory, conquering the Christian and the Moorish cities of Zamora and Badajoz.

  5. El Cid took control of the city on June 15, 1094 and held it for the last five years of his life against Almoravid counterattacks, one of which, in October 1094, found his 4,000-man army facing down an Almoravid force of more than 20,000 warriors.

    • Tony Bunting
  6. Sep 14, 2024 · Supported by the armies of Aragon, Navarre, and Portugal, Castilian forces routed the Almohad emir of Morocco, Muḥammad al-Nāṣir, at Las Navas de Tolosa (July 16, 1212) and so removed the last serious Islamic threat to Christian hegemony in Spain. The way was now open to the conquest of Andalusia.

  7. May 8, 2022 · On October 23, 1086, Alfonso and his ally the king of Aragon were decisively defeated by the Almoravids at the Battle of al-Zallaqa. The Christian advance was now stopped, and ibn Tashfin was preparing to unite all of al-Andalus under his rule.

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